#!/bin/sh # Ensure that the size of a long-named-symlink is > 0. if test "$VERBOSE" = yes; then set -x du --version fi pwd=`pwd` t0=`echo "$0"|sed 's,.*/,,'`.tmp; tmp=$t0/$$ trap 'status=$?; cd $pwd; chmod -R u+rwx $t0; rm -rf $t0 && exit $status' 0 trap '(exit $?); exit $?' 1 2 13 15 framework_failure=0 mkdir -p $tmp || framework_failure=1 cd $tmp || framework_failure=1 # Determine if `.' is on a local (would non-NFS be sufficient?) file system. # On at least some NFS implementations, symlinks never take up space, df --local . | tail -n +2 > tmp # So if this is a non-local file system, skip the test. if test -s tmp; then : # Ok. else echo "$0: skipping this test, since \`.' is on a non-local file system" 1>&2 (exit 77); exit fi if test $framework_failure = 1; then echo "$0: failure in testing framework" 1>&2 (exit 1); exit 1 fi fail=0 symlink_name_lengths='1 15 16 31 32 59 60 63 64 127 128 255 256 511 512 1024' for len in $symlink_name_lengths; do name=`yes|tr '\n' y|head -c$len` # Record the names of symlinks that are successfully created. ln -fs $name $len > /dev/null 2>&1 \ && symlinks="$symlinks $len" done du -a $symlinks > out || fail=1 # Require that at least one of these symlinks has a non-zero size. grep '^[1-9]' out > /dev/null || fail=1 (exit $fail); exit $fail